Lefcheck Jonathan S, Marion Scott R, Lombana Alfonso V, Orth Robert J
Virginia Institute of Marine Science, The College of William & Mary, Gloucester Point, Virginia, 23062, United States of America.
Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, Marine Resources Program, Newport, Oregon, 97365, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 May 31;11(5):e0156550. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156550. eCollection 2016.
Human-driven habitat fragmentation is cited as one of the most pressing threats facing many coastal ecosystems today. Many experiments have explored the consequences of fragmentation on fauna in one foundational habitat, seagrass beds, but have either surveyed along a gradient of existing patchiness, used artificial materials to mimic a natural bed, or sampled over short timescales. Here, we describe faunal responses to constructed fragmented landscapes varying from 4-400 m2 in two transplant garden experiments incorporating live eelgrass (Zostera marina L.). In experiments replicated within two subestuaries of the Chesapeake Bay, USA across multiple seasons and non-consecutive years, we comprehensively censused mesopredators and epifaunal communities using complementary quantitative methods. We found that community properties, including abundance, species richness, Simpson and functional diversity, and composition were generally unaffected by the number of patches and the size of the landscape, or the intensity of sampling. Additionally, an index of competition based on species co-occurrences revealed no trends with increasing patch size, contrary to theoretical predictions. We extend conclusions concerning the invariance of animal communities to habitat fragmentation from small-scale observational surveys and artificial experiments to experiments conducted with actual living plants and at more realistic scales. Our findings are likely a consequence of the rapid life histories and high mobility of the organisms common to eelgrass beds, and have implications for both conservation and restoration, suggesting that even small patches can rapidly promote abundant and diverse faunal communities.
人为导致的栖息地破碎化被认为是当今许多沿海生态系统面临的最紧迫威胁之一。许多实验探讨了破碎化对一种基础栖息地——海草草甸中动物群的影响,但这些实验要么是沿着现有斑块化梯度进行调查,要么使用人工材料模拟自然海床,要么在短时间尺度上进行采样。在这里,我们在两个移植花园实验中描述了动物群对面积从4平方米到400平方米不等的人工构建破碎景观的反应,实验中使用了活的鳗草(大叶藻)。在美国切萨皮克湾的两个子河口内,我们在多个季节和非连续年份进行了重复实验,使用互补的定量方法对中型食肉动物和表生动物群落进行了全面普查。我们发现,群落特征,包括丰度、物种丰富度、辛普森多样性和功能多样性以及组成,通常不受斑块数量、景观大小或采样强度的影响。此外,基于物种共现的竞争指数显示,与理论预测相反,随着斑块面积的增加没有趋势。我们将关于动物群落对栖息地破碎化不变性的结论从小规模观测调查和人工实验扩展到使用实际活植物并在更现实尺度上进行的实验。我们的发现可能是鳗草草甸中常见生物快速生活史和高流动性的结果,对保护和恢复都有影响,表明即使是小斑块也能迅速促进丰富多样的动物群落。